请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 social geography
释义

Definition of social geography in English:

social geography

noun
mass noun
  • The study of people and their environment with particular emphasis on social factors.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Marco was probably a minor civil servant at the Mongolian court who wanted to convey the result of his observations on the human and social geography of the domains of the Great Khan to the West.
    • While the vague spatial boundaries of these dirah formed an indigenous set of parishes in the desert environs of Saudi Arabia, the practical foci of ownership were water sources, keystones in the social geography of the region.
    • Park's integrative vision continued long after his death to appeal to students of ethnicity, race, and the social geography of the city.
    • Addams could not yet openly refute this resort to the politics of ethnic division because her project to link bad plumbing to social geography was just getting underway.
    • When bribery becomes so pervasive as to constitute an invisible social geography, one where the unannounced rules of life must be understood, a bribery culture develops.
    • A gradual change in the social geography of public and political communication has taken place.
    • The headlong plunge by the women of Hull-House into the ring of electoral politics also helped make rapid advances in their understanding of how money and power worked together in the construction of a social geography of inequality.
    • It effectively focuses on middle and upper-class reformers, women and men, their ideologies, programs and organizations, set in the context of the city's changing physical environment and social geography.
    • In keeping with the social geography of the time, African-American servicemen in transit during the Second World War were not permitted to cross the bridge to the more respectable northern shore.
    • In fact, Klinenberg shows us that the deaths of many Chicagoans were not random or inevitable; they were determined by the social geography of the city and the actions of government.
    • Community was present on a variety of spatial scales, and a process of differentiation, based primarily on occupation and the length and street of residence, became inscribed into the district's social geography.
    • The old identities and social geography of African chiefdoms remained partly intact and a dynamic factor in the country's development.
    • The French were on the move in the 1960s, altering the social geography of France around an axis running between Le Havre and Marseille.
    • Instead, they suggest a new social geography has emerged across the U.S., including reference groups based more on shared interests than geography.
    • In order to answer this crucial question, mapping the social geography of the city, disaggregating public health data and other indicators of the environmental quality of urban life is essential.
    • Addams highlighted how the politicians played a vital part in erecting a social geography of class division between the riverfront and the lakefront zones.
    • But the social geography of pollution has changed over time.
    • Examination of the social geography of risk has emerged as a powerful tool for understanding where and among whom risky practices occur.
 
 

Definition of social geography in US English:

social geography

noun
  • The study of people and their environment with particular emphasis on social factors.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It effectively focuses on middle and upper-class reformers, women and men, their ideologies, programs and organizations, set in the context of the city's changing physical environment and social geography.
    • While the vague spatial boundaries of these dirah formed an indigenous set of parishes in the desert environs of Saudi Arabia, the practical foci of ownership were water sources, keystones in the social geography of the region.
    • The French were on the move in the 1960s, altering the social geography of France around an axis running between Le Havre and Marseille.
    • Community was present on a variety of spatial scales, and a process of differentiation, based primarily on occupation and the length and street of residence, became inscribed into the district's social geography.
    • Examination of the social geography of risk has emerged as a powerful tool for understanding where and among whom risky practices occur.
    • But the social geography of pollution has changed over time.
    • Addams could not yet openly refute this resort to the politics of ethnic division because her project to link bad plumbing to social geography was just getting underway.
    • The headlong plunge by the women of Hull-House into the ring of electoral politics also helped make rapid advances in their understanding of how money and power worked together in the construction of a social geography of inequality.
    • Park's integrative vision continued long after his death to appeal to students of ethnicity, race, and the social geography of the city.
    • Addams highlighted how the politicians played a vital part in erecting a social geography of class division between the riverfront and the lakefront zones.
    • In fact, Klinenberg shows us that the deaths of many Chicagoans were not random or inevitable; they were determined by the social geography of the city and the actions of government.
    • Marco was probably a minor civil servant at the Mongolian court who wanted to convey the result of his observations on the human and social geography of the domains of the Great Khan to the West.
    • In keeping with the social geography of the time, African-American servicemen in transit during the Second World War were not permitted to cross the bridge to the more respectable northern shore.
    • When bribery becomes so pervasive as to constitute an invisible social geography, one where the unannounced rules of life must be understood, a bribery culture develops.
    • The old identities and social geography of African chiefdoms remained partly intact and a dynamic factor in the country's development.
    • Instead, they suggest a new social geography has emerged across the U.S., including reference groups based more on shared interests than geography.
    • A gradual change in the social geography of public and political communication has taken place.
    • In order to answer this crucial question, mapping the social geography of the city, disaggregating public health data and other indicators of the environmental quality of urban life is essential.
 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/9 6:26:27